Abstract

Objective: To investigate the efficacy of respiratory rehabilitation in preventing postoperative pulmonary complications (PPC) and to define which patients can benefit. Design: A randomized clinical trial. Setting: A public hospital. Patients: Eighty-one patients who had upper abdominal surgery were distributed into two homogeneous groups: control ( n = 41) and rehabilitation ( n = 40). Intervention: Breathing exercises in the rehabilitation group. Main Outcome Measures: Preoperative and postoperative clinical evaluation, spirometry, arterial gasometry, and simple chest X-rays. Results: The incidence of PPC was 7.5% in the rehabilitation group and 19.5% in the control group; the control group also had more radiologic alterations ( p = .01). Stratified PPC analysis did not reveal significant differences between groups. However, high- and moderate-risk patients in the rehabilitation group had fewer PPC. Multivariate analysis showed a greater PPC risk associated with pulmonary history ( p = .02) and duration of surgery longer than 120min ( p = .03), while rehabilitation exerted a protective effect ( p = .06). Significant postoperative decreases in pulmonary volumes and arterial gas values were recorded in both groups, without significant differences. Conclusions: Respiratory rehabilitation protects against PPC and is more effective in moderate- and high-risk patients, but does not affect surgery-induced functional alterations.

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